📡⏳The Latency Lag | Why Your Internet Feels Slower Than a Friday Afternoon at Work🤔

Ronald BartelsRonald Bartels
5 min read

Latency – the sneaky delay that turns your lightning-fast internet into something that feels like dial-up from the 90s. 📡⏳ You click a link, but nothing happens immediately. Your video call freezes mid-sentence. Your online game lags, and suddenly, you’re outplayed by a kid with better internet. But why does this happen? And more importantly, why does latency seem to get worse the more people are using the network? 🤔 Let’s unpack it.


Why Does Latency Exist?

At its core, latency is the time it takes for data to travel from point A (your device) to point B (the server) and back again. 🚀 Every time you load a webpage, send an email, or stream a video, your data is on a journey through fibre cables, wireless links, and network routers – all of which introduce delays.

But this delay isn’t constant. Some days, your internet is snappy. Other days, it’s slower than a queue at Home Affairs. Why? Because latency is affected by multiple factors, including:

🛤️ Distance

  • Data has to physically travel across networks, and the further it goes, the longer it takes.

  • If you’re connecting to a local server, it’s fast. If it’s halfway across the world, expect a noticeable delay. 🌍

🔀 Congestion (Load on the Network)

  • Think of a highway at peak traffic – the more cars (data packets), the slower everyone moves. 🚗💨

  • As more users stream, download, and video call, the available bandwidth shrinks, making latency worse.

Packet Loss & Jitter

  • If packets get lost due to congestion or poor network quality, they have to be re-sent, adding more delay.

  • Jitter (variations in packet arrival times) makes things worse, especially for voice and video calls. 📞🎥

⚙️ Network Equipment & Routing

  • Every router, switch, or firewall between you and the destination introduces processing delays. 🖥️

  • Some networks route traffic inefficiently (think of taking a scenic detour instead of a straight road).


How Load Makes Latency Worse (And Why You Should Care)

Now, let’s talk about the biggest killer of network performancenetwork congestion. 🚦

Imagine a four-lane highway. When traffic is light, cars move freely. Now picture a public holiday rush – bumper-to-bumper traffic, hooters blaring, and frustrated drivers crawling forward. 🚗🚙🚕 The internet works the same way. The more data packets trying to move through a congested link, the longer they take to reach their destination.

And here’s the kicker – as load increases, latency doesn’t just rise linearly; it skyrockets! 📈 A link that was running at 50% capacity might have an extra 10ms of delay, but at 90% capacity, it can spike to hundreds of milliseconds, making video calls stutter, gaming impossible, and cloud applications unresponsive.

The worst part? Many service providers overload their networks with too many customers, causing chronic congestion. You pay for “high-speed” internet but get peak-hour gridlock instead. Eish! 🤦‍♂️


How to Combat Latency (Without Crying in a Corner)

Thankfully, you’re not powerless against the dreaded lag monster. Here are some strategies to keep your network snappy:

Prioritise Traffic (QoS – Quality of Service)

  • Critical applications (like VoIP and video calls) get priority over downloads and social media scrolling.

  • Proper QoS ensures latency-sensitive traffic isn’t stuck behind a Netflix binge session. 🎬

  • Spreading traffic across multiple connections reduces congestion on any single link.

  • SD-WAN solutions can bond multiple links to create a more stable, low-latency experience.

🏎️ Reduce Hop Count

  • Fewer routers and switches mean less processing delay.

  • Direct peering with content providers (Google, Microsoft, Netflix, etc.) speeds things up.

🔄 Optimise Routing

  • Some networks route traffic inefficiently. A smart SD-WAN solution picks the best route in real time, avoiding congested paths.

🚀 Switch to SD-WAN | The Latency Slayer

Standard networking treats all traffic the same, but SD-WAN is next-level when it comes to latency control. Here’s how it changes the game:

  • Dynamic Path Selection – SD-WAN constantly measures latency across all available links and sends traffic down the fastest route. 🏁

  • Fairness - ensures that all traffic flows get a fair share of bandwidth, preventing a single flow from hogging the link. 🎛️ One method to achieve this is Stochastic Fair Queuing (SFQ), which distributes packets into multiple queues using a hash function, ensuring that no single flow dominates. 🚦 Unlike traditional FIFO queuing, SFQ prevents bandwidth-heavy applications (like large downloads) from starving latency-sensitive traffic (like VoIP and gaming). 🕹️ While SFQ doesn’t guarantee strict bandwidth limits per flow, it significantly improves network performance in shared environments by balancing traffic more equitably. ⚖️

  • Adaptive Bandwidth Management – Instead of just slamming traffic onto whatever’s available, SD-WAN intelligently adjusts loads to keep performance optimal.


No More Excuses – Get a Real Solution

Let’s face it – in South Africa, dodgy internet is part of life, but that doesn’t mean your business has to suffer. Latency is a productivity killer, and if you’re relying on standard ISP failover and random buffering prayers, you’re playing a losing game.

With Fusion’s SD-WAN, your business gets:
✔️ Zero disruptions – No more calls dropping mid-meeting.
✔️ Optimal performance – Smart routing keeps latency under control.
✔️ True redundancy – Seamless failover means no interruptions.

So, if your internet is making you look bad in front of clients, it’s time to stop blaming load shedding and get a real solution. 🚀

Fusion’s SD-WAN: No lag, no drama, just pure networking magic. 🧙‍♂️✨


Want a latency-free life? Let’s chat. Your internet deserves better. 😉

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Written by

Ronald Bartels
Ronald Bartels

Driving SD-WAN Adoption in South Africa